50th Anniversary

Dr. G. Gayle Stephens was a teacher, progressive force, and ‘poet laureate of family medicine’


 

A thought leader for family medicine

He held numerous state and national leadership positions, and initiated what became the Keystone Conference Series – an invitational gathering of leaders in family medicine that examined and discuss the specialty’s ongoing development. In 2006, he was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Science.

Dr. Stephens authored a textbook, The Intellectual Basis of Family Medicine (Tucson, Ariz.: Winter Publishing Company, 1982), and authored essays, which Dr. Green said will stand the test of time.

“Some of us refer to him as the poet laureate of family medicine,” Dr. Green noted.

In a 1974 article on clinical wisdom, Dr. Stephens wrote that “it is not enough to determine what condition the patient has, but also what patient has the condition.” In another of these essays, which was published in 1979, Dr. Stephens wrote that “physicians need to keep in touch with their own tradition and with public welfare if they are to be considered moral by the society that sponsors them, and from which they take their strength and privilege.”

These excerpts are featured in an article by John P. Geyman, MD, published in 2011 in Family Medicine, called “G. Gayle Stephens Festschrift”.

A ‘progressive force’

Linda Prine, MD, professor of family and community medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, knows of Dr. Stephens from her teachers. “The people I looked up to when I was a younger physician were quoting his Counterculture article,” she said.

“It’s not that I studied him. But whenever I heard someone speak about the values of family medicine, his name would come up [and] the values of universal health care and community care and putting the patients’ interests first ahead of the insurance companies and being a doctor for the whole family,” Dr. Prine said. Dr. Stephens was a “progressive force that our specialty has not always lived up to.”

Dr. Stephens voiced serious concerns about the impact of managed care in the 1980s and of “gatekeeping,” a practice intended to control access to specialists and reduce costs.

“He was many times not welcomed by family medicine [for his warnings] against the temptations that managed care presented,” said Dr. Green, the founding director of the Robert Graham Center, Washington. “He saw the conflict of interest of being a gatekeeper, how that would erode trust in a personal relationship with your personal doctor.”

“Gayle thought it was a disaster waiting to happen, and it was,” he said, referring to the eventual rejection by the public of barriers to direct access to specialists.

Through the 1990s and more recently, Dr. Stephens expressed frustration with the “medical-industrial complex” and the decline of family medicine after its surge in the 1970s and 1980s, Dr. Green said. “But in my opinion, near the end of his life, he was encouraged by young leaders who he saw grasped the important ideas from the ages.”

Dr. Stephens’ interest in medical education extended to nurses and nurse practitioners (the latter of whom had begun their discipline in the mid-1960s), and to optometrists, for whom he taught a recurring course in “physical diagnosis.”

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